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´ëÇÑÇÙÀÇÇÐȸÁö 2004;38(2 )190~197
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(In Vivo Nuclear Imaging of Apoptosis)
Author ÀÌż·,õ±âÁ¤,
Tae Sup Lee, Ph.D. and Gi Jeong Cheon, M.D.
Affiliation ¿øÀÚ·ÂÀÇÇпø ½ÎÀÌŬ·ÎÆ®·ÐÀÀ¿ë¿¬±¸½Ç, ÇÙÀÇÇаú
1Laboratory of Cyclotron Application and 2Department of Nuclear Medicine, Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Sciences, Seoul, Korea
Abstract

Apoptosis plays a role in the pathophysiology of many kinds of diseases and in the response of treatment. Compared to the necrosis, the apoptosis is a genetically controlled and energy-dependent process which removes the unwanted cells from the body; programmed cell death or cell suicide. During the apoptosis, phosphatidylserine is expressed in the cytoplasmic outer membrane in the early phase. Annexin V, an endogenous human protein (MW=35 kD), has an affinity of about 10-9 M for the phosphatidylserine exposed on the outer membrane of apoptotic cells. Annexin V can be radiolabeled with 99mTc by HYNIC or EC chelators, which can be used as an radiotracer for the in vivo imaging of apoptosis. In this article, we reviewed the apoptosis, radiolabeling of annexin V, and the experimental and clinical data using annexin V imaging.(Korean J Nucl Med 38(2):190-197, 2004)

Keyword Aapoptosis, 99mTc-annexin V
Full text Article 3802190.pdf
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